Official department: the first of the six departments, in charge of the selection, inspection, appointment, removal, promotion, transfer and commendation of civil servants nationwide, and its functions are equivalent to those of the current Central Organization Department.
Housing Department: in charge of land, household registration, currency, various taxes, fiscal revenue and expenditure, official salaries and other affairs, and its functions are equivalent to those of the current Ministry of Agriculture and Ministry of Finance.
Ritual department: in charge of important court etiquette, presiding over the imperial examination and receiving foreign guests. Its functions are equivalent to those of the Ministry of Education and the Ministry of Foreign Affairs.
Ministry of War: responsible for the selection of military officers, the training of soldiers, the manufacture and storage of ordnance, and the issuance of military orders. Its function is equivalent to the current Ministry of National Defense.
Ministry of Punishment: in charge of national judicial affairs, its functions are equivalent to those of the current Ministry of Justice.
Ministry of Industry: in charge of engineering, artisans, reclamation, water conservancy, transportation and other affairs throughout the country. Its functions are equivalent to those of the current Ministry of Water Resources and the Ministry of Communications.
Extended data:
Six doors belong to the subordinate branches of imperial prison organs, and belong to the punishments department. The main task is to arrest senior criminals and crack down on major criminal activities such as rebellion and corruption.
The six departments are the general names of the official department, the household department, the ritual department, the military department, the criminal department and the industrial department. Since the Sui and Tang Dynasties, these six departments have been set up in the central administrative organs. During the Qin and Han Dynasties, Jiuqing was in charge of all ministries. After Wei and Jin Dynasties, Shang Shu was divided into Cao Zhi, and gradually changed from Cao to the Ministry. It was not until the Sui and Tang Dynasties that Liubu was identified as a part of Shangshu Province. Yuan dynasty changed six books into Chinese book province; In the early Ming Dynasty, the six departments were directly responsible to the emperor, with greater power and higher status. Six Scrap Books in the Late Qing Dynasty.
Baidu Encyclopedia-Six Departments (collectively referred to as the six departments in the central administrative organs)